Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

dcwebNoticeably, there are numerous advertised cancer treatments on the net. Some are real, some are scams. You feel it’s a scam when the seller is trying to earn big money. I’ve presented funny treatments here in my weekly blog such as Vita Elixxir, Metball, coffee enema in Mexico.

These treatments can be dangerous, waste your money and just not proven to work. I caution you to be aware and use your better judgment and to talk about them with your doctor.

Important question to ask

Ask these questions before you try one that is too tempting to resist:

Cure all

• Does the treatment promise a cure for all cancers?
Different types of cancer have different reactions to the same drug. Clearly, one drug can’t cure all cancer types. If the treatment promises a panacea for all cancers, beware!

No standard cancer treatment

• Are you told not to use recommended or standard medical treatments?
Standard regimens- surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy- have taken years to evolve as the most scientific and efficacious treatment. Although different methods of surgery and radiation are employed, and an array of chemotherapy drugs is utilized, these regimens have been proven in clinical trials. Stick to it!

No side effect

• Does the treatment offer benefits but claim to have no side effects?
Most treatments – even those highly effective – have side effects. A dose to eradicate abnormal cancer cells also affects the normal cells with serious to mild adverse reactions. If that treatment has no side effects, it simply means they aren’t out there to kill those cancer cells. In clinical trial, they actually try to give the maximum amount of drug that we can tolerate.

Need to travel

• Does the treatment require you to travel to another country?
Scientifically proven cancer treatments are universal in the medical world. Treatments that are clinically tested according to the norms of scientific testing isn’t for a specific country but shared for the world, whether you’re in the UK, Russia, Vietnam, Mexico, the USA or Canada. So, why should you travel?

Miracle cure

• Do the promoters use terms like “scientific breakthrough,” “miracle cure,” “secret ingredient,” or “ancient remedy”?
These highly improbable descriptions are techniques to make you bite.
How was this “scientific breakthrough” carried out? What’s the “secret ingredient” that the scientific community doesn’t know? If there’s a “miracle cure,” then the thousands of cancer researchers all over the planet would have discovered it by now.

Many witnesses

• Are you offered personal stories of amazing results but no actual scientific evidence?
Lo! Testimonials can be faked. Promoters can pay people to sing praises for a certain products and present it to cancer stricken customers. Just laugh it off!

Aggressive behavior

• Do the promoters attack the medical or scientific community or playing the victim of dangerous corporations?
The medical or scientific community is exceedingly advanced in discovering new and effectual therapies. Promoters attack the medical community so you’ll focus on their products. These promoters should complain to the FDA if they have concerns about a standard therapy.

What is left to do

But, there are valuable complementary therapies that supplement standard cancer regimens. Functional foods top that list such as small berries, green tea and all those colored fruits and vegetables. The not-so-secret ingredient, phytochemicals, works against angiogenesis and other cancer strategies of sucking that life out of you.

Bottom line

Continue your standard treatment, incorporate 5-10 servings of functional foods daily plus exercise. If you’re in doubt, discuss these non-traditional therapies with your health care provider. It means a big difference in your survival.

Category: All Cancer
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3 Responses

  1. 1
    Wendy 

    I’m confused about this article. First your website touts itself as an effective tool for nutrition-based cancer treatments, and then this article talks about drugs. Clearly, these two do not mix.

    And why would I discuss a Gerson-type cancer treatment with my medical doctor and be expected to have faith in his opinion that it’s all quackery????

  2. You raise many queries in my thoughts; you wrote an excellent article, but this articlee is also thought provoking, and I am going to need to wonder it a bit more; I will be back soon.

  3. 3
    admin 

    Cancer treatments has to be approved or to have very strong scientific backgrounds. Most of these alternative treatments have neither.
    Our best chance is standard cancer treatment and we can complement with functional foods which has strong scientific backgrounds and they are tested to be approved.

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